In April 2015, “Saturday Night Live’s” Kate McKinnon’s Billary Clinton (watch the video above) hilariously proclaimed (to the horror of her communications aide): “Citizens! You will elect me! I will be your leader!”

Prescient.

Today, the real Billary Clinton proclaimed on CNN: “I will be the nominee for my party… That is already done, in effect. There is no way that I won’t be.”

Billary was even wearing a blue pantsuit when she made this pronouncement. Watch:

Just: Wow.

The hubris.

OK, here’s the deal: It’s up to the super-delegates at the Democratic Party convention in Philadelphia in late July to determine whether Bernie Sanders or Billary Clinton will be the 2016 Democratic Party presidential nominee. Only they, with their votes, have the power to give Billary or Bernie the magic 2,383 delegates that either needs to win the nomination.

It’s actually not up to Queen Billary, as much as she and her henchweasels, including, of course, Democratic National Committee head Debbie Wasserman Schultz, have done their best to rig the game in Billary’s favor and to shove Billary down our throats.

With about five and a half more months to go before Election Day in November, could these poll numbers change? Sure.

But both Billary Clinton and Donald Trump have been on the national stage for decades now.How many voters by now aren’t familiar enough with both of them that they’re going to change their minds between now and November? How much movement can we really expect to see?

Is Trump enjoying a bit of a bounce from his recently having emerged as the sole survivor of the overcrowded field of Repugnican Tea Party presidential wannabes?

Probably.

But I expect Trump to overtake Billary in all of the polls any day now — and what will happen at the Democratic Party convention in July if, by that time, nationwide polls have had Trump beating Billary by a decent margin (say, by at least 5 percent)?

What will the super-delegates do?

Which will be more important at the convention: coronating Billary, even though there’s a very good chance that she’ll lose in November, or stopping Donald Trump by nominating Bernie Sanders (assuming that Sanders is still polling significantly above Trump at that time, say, by at least 5 percent)?

It comes down to this: Do the super-delegates go with the winner of the majority of the pledged delegates if, as expected, Billary goes into the convention with more pledged delegates than does Bernie? Or do the delegates look to November and decide which candidate has the better chance of beating Trump?

Is winning the White House in November not the objective?

Is Queen Billary’s colossal ego, including her sense of entitlement, more important than keeping the White House in Democratic hands?

Yes, there is a strong case to be made that the winner of the most pledged delegates should be the nominee — it’s the only democratic way to do it, right? — but isn’t the purpose of the convention to pick the strongest challenger for November?

And we can change the rules of the game for next time — I repeatedly have advocated for the abolishment of the super-delegates, in fact — but for this round, the rules of the game are that the super-delegates, also called “unbound” delegates (pledged delegates are “bound” delegates), may vote however they please; they are not bound to vote with how those in their states voted.

It easily could come down to only the Democratic Party’s super-delegates being able to stop a President Trump by picking the stronger, nationally popular Bernie Sanders as the party’s champion instead of picking the weak, nationally unpopular Billary Clinton — no matter how the people have voted and caucused up to that point.

Buckle up. It’s going to be an even bumpier ride than it has been as of late.*

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*Seriously, the more that the nationally despised and increasingly desperate Billary’s poll numbers tank, the more that she and her desperate surrogates will attack Bernie Sanders and his supporters, such as by calling yelling at the state party convention in Las Vegas on Saturday “violence” when, in fact, there was only shouting and no physical violence.

In their desperation and sense of entitlement they’ll lie through their fangs even more than they already have been. They will take slander and libel to a whole new level.